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Nurjahan Begum 1925 - |
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Nurjahan Begum, editor of Begum magazine, began her career in the 1940s. Journalism, activism, social work -- she has done it all, and in a time people would have trouble imagining women doing anything of the sort. To this day, she continues to help women in towns and villages find a foothold in society through her efforts to provide them with knowledge, a sense of awareness and even identities as women writers.
KAJALIE SHEHREEN ISLAM
"When I came to Kolkata," reminisces Nurjahan Begum, "my father, to the utter dismay of my mother, had my nose-pin cut off and my hair sheared into a 'China bob' cut!"
Nurjahan Begum was highly active throughout her school and college life. "I had a wonderful childhood," she says. "We did everything, from singing and dancing to acting." She even wrote, directed and acted in college plays. "But it was all within the walls of the school and college," she recalls. Most Bangali and especially Muslim women of the time hardly stepped out of the house, let alone sing and dance in public places. The volatile days of 1947 had made it even more dangerous for people living in this region. "It was under these circumstances," says Nurjahan Begum, "that Begum was first published."
Nurjahan Begum's father, Mohammad Nasiruddin, had wanted to bring women into
journalism. He therefore started an annual women's issue of Shawgat in
1927. Every year,
"It was very difficult to bring out the publication at that time," recalls Nurjahan Begum. There was the problem of block and type, of collecting ink and paper, and of transporting the staff to and from the office during the communal riots. There were not too many women writers and hardly any women photographers. "But we still managed to bring out an issue every week," says Nurjahan Begum proudly. After three years in Kolkata, Begum moved to Dhaka, along with Mohammad Nasiruddin, Nurjahan Begum and the rest of the family.
The
response to Begum was enormous. Not only were women from across the
country writing letters and giving feedback on the various writings published in
the magazine, but many men, Nurjahan Begum also reminisces about her father and
her husband, the two men who had the greatest influence on her life and her
success in her career.
Her husband, Rokonuzzaman Khan -- whom she married initially against the will of
her fat After her, says Nurjahan Begum, her daughters will take charge of Begum. "Great changes will take place in their hands," she says. "They won't accept bad writing. They want good paper and colour in the magazine.”
Her eldest daughter, Flora Nasrin Khan Shakhi, did her Honours and Master's in
English Literature from Dhaka University. Her younger daughter,
Begum magazine is currently a monthly costing Tk. 10 (as opposed to the 25 paisa it used to be sold at in the beginning), but its editor has hopes of bringing it out as a weekly again. Despite the various problems she has faced over the years in bringing out the magazine, from communal riots to postage problems, Nurjahan Begum has not lost her zeal for her work or the profession as a whole. She does not sit around simply praising the women journalists today but rather worries about what still holds them back. "Transport problems and lack of security are the main problems facing women journalists today," she says. "In the old days, my friends and I used to go watch the 9 o'clock show at the movies, which would end at midnight (albeit with her father)," she recalls. "It can hardly be thought of in our country today." Women are much more insecure and much less free today, believes Nurjahan Begum. "Sometimes I wonder whether it's a conspiracy to hold women back," she says.
Nurjahan Begum did many things at a time when it was much less easy than it is today, and what many women would not have the courage or determination to do even today. With the help of her father, she also established the Begum Club in 1954. Though now defunct, in its time, the Club was a thriving organisation of women from home and abroad getting together to discuss literature and music, culture and society. Nurjahan Begum still has hopes of reviving the Club.
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Source: The Daily Star |
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